Jorge von Hauenschild
From Amateur Collector to Professional
Archaeologist in a Remote Corner of Argentina
D
H e n ri k B. Li ndskoug
CONICET, Museo de Antropologia, Facultad de Filosofia y Humani
dades, Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Av. Hipolito Yrigoyen 1 74, CP
5000, Cordoba Capital, Cordoba, Argentina, phone: + 54 351 4331058
ext 311 ; email: henrikblindskoug@gmail.com
Abstract
The vo n H a u e n sch i l d col lecti o n was o ne of the fo u nd i ng col lecti ons of
the M useo de Antropologfa, a u n iversity m use u m at the Facu ltad d e
F i l osoffa y H u manidades, U n ive rsidad N acional d e C o rd o ba, located i n
Cordoba Cap ital, ce ntral Arge ntina. T h e co l l ectio n is o n e of t h e larg
est at the m u s e u m with over 4000 objects from the nearby p rovi n ce
of Santiago d e l Este ro , a p l ace al most u n exam i ned by Arge nti nean
archaeologi sts s i n ce the early works i n i tiated by the Wagner brothe rs i n
the 1920s. Santiago has bee n seen a s a margi nal place i n the nati o nal
Argenti nean history and perceived as an i m pove rished and remote
p lace , b u t d u ri n g part of the early 20th ce n t u ry, Santiago was t h riving,
especial l y at the ti me of the large rai l road con structions i n the co u ntry.
Santiago was al so the home of the G e rm an - b o rn e ngineer, J o rge vo n
Hauensch i l d fo r 30 years . He fo rmed the " von Hauensc h i l d Collec
ti o n " by excavati ng p re - h i sto rical to mbs i n the p rovi nce i n h i s q uest
for archaeologi cal treas u res. The col lecti o n has been al most u n to u ched
si n ce the d eath of vo n Hauensc h i l d i n 195 1 . Research o n the h i story
of the co l l ecti o n shows the traj ectory of vo n Hauensc h i l d from a mere
amate u r to a p rofessi o n al archaeologist. Begi n n i n g as a co l l ecto r of
c u ri o u s th i ngs, he transiti o n ed i n to a modern archaeol ogist perfo rm i n g
syste m atic archaeol ogical i n vestigations.
During the early part of the twentieth century, in a remote province in Santiago del Es
tero, Jorge von Hauenschild ( 1 877- 1 95 1 ), a German immigrant to the South Ameri
can continent, awakened an interest in the local archaeology of his new homeland.
Over a 20 year period, von Hauenschild collected local archaeological objects from
his new home province in Santiago del Estero. The collection grew to comprise 4000
Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals, Volume 8, Number 2,
Spring 2012, pp. 127-150. Copyright © 2012 AltaMira Press. All rights reserved.
1 27
1 28
F ROM AMAT E U R COLLECTO R TO PRO F ESSIONAL ARCHAEO LOG IST
&
objects. Today this collection forms part of the Museo de Antropologia, a university
museum at the National University of Cordoba (UNC) in central Argentina. The von
Hauenschild Collection consists mostly of archaeological objects from the province
Santiago del Estero, but some ethnographic objects also form part of the collection, as
well as an extensive correspondence, photos, drawing, books and maps all belonging
to von Hauenschild and donated to the museum after his death. Today this collection
is seen as one of the founding collections at the museum and it is also one of the larg
est within the museum's care. The collection remained nearly untouched for 50 years
before intense work was initiated. A large part of the information gathered about the
life of von Hauenschild comes from his personal archive, where both personal corre
spondences and official letters can be found alongside several unfinished documents
designated for publication, but also various newspaper-clippings from his lifetime.
This personal archive is located in the archive of the Museo de Antropologia, UNC
in Cordoba. This paper includes reference to materials in the personal archive of von
Hauenschild, hereafter referred to as PAH. When possible, specific reference is made
to the holdings within the collection; however, in cases where the documents have no
number, reference is made to the archive in general. This material has been used to
reconstruct von Hauenschild's life and the history of his collection with the museum.
The collection has been practically untouched since von Hauenschild died. As a result,
a lot of information about the collection has been lost due to the changes within the
institution (renaming of the institution, its change in focus, and subsequent closure
before reconstruction and re-opening).
From Germa ny to a Remote Corner of South America
In 1877, Jorge von Hauenschild (originally Georg) was born in village of Tscheidt,
Upper Silesia, in Germany, an area populated with both Polish and Germans, and a
much disputed area. His father, Max von Hauenschild, was a landowner and district
administrator in the Cosel district. Jorge was early marked out for a military career
and entered the cadet school, Walstatt; and later Lichterfelde; in Berlin at the age
of 1 5. In 1 895 he obtained the rank of lieutenant, but soon afterward, in 1 903, he
abandoned the career and began to study engineering in Dresden where he studied
for five years.
In 1 908, von Hauenschild emigrated to Argentina, where his first employ
ment was as an engineer at F. C. al Pacifico, a train company in Buenos Aires. Later,
he also worked as an engineer in various infrastructural construction companies,
mostly in Southern Argentina. In May 1 909, he married Paulina Runge ( 1 8881 972) in Mendoza. They never had children. In 1 920 he obtained employment at
the Departamento Nacional de Higiene in a campaign against malaria in Santiago
del Estero. He worked closely with the province of Santiago del Estero on differ-
& H E N RI K B. LI N DSKOUG
Figure 1.
129
Jorge von Hauensch i l d (left) and u n known person i n the fiel d . Construction o f the
water manage ment system i n Rfo Dulce. Photo from the col lection of photos belonging to the
von Haue n schild col lection. I mage courtesy of the von Hauenschild col lection at the Museo de
Antropologfa, FFy H , U N C .
ent engineering projects, mostly to do with hydraulic engineering. He moved to
La Banda in Santiago, where he spent much of his life. In 1 925 von Hauenschild
received a contract from the General Department of Irrigation to perform catch
ment studies of the water of Rio Dulce in Santiago. He worked until 1 926 on various
works of irrigation and water management in Rio Dulce. In 1 926 he managed to get
new employment at the Escuela Industrial de la Nacion de Santiago del Estero1 as a
teacher, a job which he held until 1 948 when he went to Cordoba. Given that many
of the archaeological settlements are found near water, von Hauenschild must have
encountered various archaeological objects during his time in the field, experience
which would have also provided a good understanding of the local terrain.
The Archaeological H eritage of Santiago del Estero
The archaeological heritage in the Santiago del Estero province in Argentina was
not thoroughly investigated compared with many other regions in Argentina. D if-
1 30
F ROM AMAT E U R COLL ECTOR TO PROFES SI ONAL ARCHAEO LO G I ST
&
ficult heritage laws and their application in the province resulted in few archaeo
logical expeditions. The first scholars to actually show interest in the archaeologi
cal heritage in Santiago del Estero were Emilio Roger Wagner ( 1 868- 1 949) and
Duncan Ladislao Wagner ( 1 864- 1 937) who are known as the Wagner brothers
(Martinez et al 2003, 2008).
Several of the first-generation archaeologists in Argentina - such as Fran
cisco P. Moreno ( 1 852- 1 9 19), Samuel Lafone Quevedo ( 1 835- 1 920), Adan Qui
roga ( 1 863 - 1 904) and Juan B. Ambrosetti ( 1 865- 1 9 1 7) - were aware of the ar
chaeological heritage in Santiago del Estero but never took notice of it (Martinez
et al. 2003, 2008; Taboada 20 1 1 ). The Wagner brothers were the first to show and
disseminate their discoveries and to attempt to demonstrate the importance of the
archaeology in Santiago del Estero.
Despite their mistaken understandings of the origins of Chaco-Santiago
civilization (Wagner and Wagner 1 934, Martinez et al 2003, Ocampo 2005), the
Wagner brothers were the first to excavate the tombs in a systematic way, although
modern archaeologists would have seriously criticized the ways in which they
worked at the time. Archaeological contexts were destroyed and scientific infor
mation lost. They excavated several hundred tombs, yet there is no information,
maps, drawings or other records of the archaeological sites that were excavated.
neither is there information about the manner of the excavations, presenting is
sues of archaeological praxis. Von Hauenschild criticized this openly in 1 94 1 (El
Indio 15 February 1 94 1 , PAH document 1 1 8).
The practice in the last part of the 1 9th century and first part of the 20th
century was to find "beautiful" objects or "museum pieces" that could be put on
display in museums or in private collections. Many obj ects, such as broken pottery
and bones, were discarded. Attention was paid to acquiring objects for collections,
which in many cases were associated with the collectors who wanted to fill their
personal curiosity cabinets, a place where strange objects and extraordinary items
were displayed to the public, this giving the collector a particular social status.
At the time, stratigraphical excavations were seldom done. Most excavations
were simply done with a shovel. Many objects, as noted above, were discarded. If
human remains were found, sometimes they were saved, but most often thrown
away. Of those body parts saved, usually attention was paid to the cranium, but en
tire skeletons were saved only in very few cases. While a hundred years ago archae
ologists would excavate 200 tombs in a number of months, using these techniques;
today work progresses very slowly as attention is paid to all materials found on
site. Excavating a tomb might take up to a week, or even longer, depending on the
circumstances, and such activity provides the archaeologist access to much more
detailed information about past societies. Such new methods and improved tech-
& H E N R I K B. L I N DSKOUG
131
niques provide the modern archaeologist with a range of new information that can
help to make better interpretations and clarify questions about our past.
After the Wagner brothers had drawn attention to the Chaco- Santiaguefia
civilization, several scholars became interested in the archaeological heritage of
Santiago del Estero. O ne of these was von Hauenschild who a couple of years later
started his own explorations. In addition to von Hauenschild, Dr. Henry Reichlen
( 1 9 1 4-2000) from the University of Fribourg in Switzerland, came to Santiago del
Estero in 1 938 ( PAH documents 1 07, 1 08, 1 09, 1 1 1 , 1 1 4) to explore the archaeo
logical heritage of the province. The architect Hector Greslebin ( 1 893- 1 97 1 ),2 pro
fessor of archaeology at the Instituto Nacional del Profesorado Secundario, went to
Santiago del Estero to study its prehistory in 1 93 1 . While there, Greslebin visited
the Wagner museum and several private collections, among them the collections
of von Hauenschild, Rafael Delgado, and Dr. Jorge Argafiaraz ( PAH document
50) . He also conducted some excavations in Beltran (El Indio 1 5 February 1 94 1 ,
PAH document 1 1 8).
In addition to the academic elite, the public was interested in the prehistory
of Santiago del Estero. The public was interested in how the archaeological remains
unearthed in Santiago del Estero were interpreted and followed the scholarly dis
cussion in the 1 940s (Ocampo 2005: 1 1 5). Investigations or expeditions, as they
were called at the time, were made in the 1 940s by Antonio Serrano ( 1 899- 1 982),
who served as Director of the Instituto de Arqueologia, Linguistica y Folklore, "Dr.
Pablo Cabrera" at the UNC. (Von Hauenschild later became employed there as
Ayudante Investigador.) Investigations in Santiago del Estero have been carried out
by others including Victor Nufiez Reguiero, Roque Manuel Gomez ( 1 970; 2009),
Jose Togo,3 and more recently by Constanza Taboada.
Other Collectors in Santiago del Estero
Von Hauenschild was not the only one who did archaeological excavations and
collected archaeological artifacts. As mentioned above, the Wagner brothers did
extensive work in Santiago del Estero, especially around Mistol Paso in the De
partment of Avellaneda where they lived. The Wagner brothers' collection was
later donated to the Museo Arcaico de Santiago del Estero where Emilio Wagner
got a position as director and Duncan was vice director.4 Other collectors worth
mentioning during the same epoch, who owned large collections were Rafael Del
gado ( 1 889- 1 95 7) and Dr. Jorge Argafi.araz, which both belong to the intellectual
elite of Santiago at the time (PAH document 50) . Today we can find at least part
of the Argafiaraz collection at the Museo de Antropologia, UNC in Cordoba where
the von Hauenschild collection is also located.
132
F ROM AMAT E U R COLLECTOR T O PRO FE S S I O NAL ARCHAEOLOG I ST
&
Negation of the Archaeological Heritage in Sa ntiago del Estero
During the 1 930s, the intellectual elite of Buenos Aires were working with Argen
tinean prehistory at two prestigious universities in Argentina, the University of Bue
nos Aires (UBA) and La Plata Universities which house research institutes Museo
Etnografico de Juan B. Ambrosetti and Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo de La
Plata, respectively. Due to centralization and economic resources, most of the ar
chaeological research projects are located in Buenos Aires, although investigations
are done in other provinces of Argentina. However, those working with prehistory
in Argentina did not consider the archaeological heritage of Santiago del Estero
important. In a conference organized in Buenos Aires in 1 939 where the prehistory
of Santiago del Estero was discussed, the mounds - which are prehistoric burial
tombs - were considered natural formations by some of the scholars and the asso
ciated heritage were considered of minor importance.5 Von Hauenschild and a few
others, including the Wagners, understood the significance of the archaeological
remains left by the people that once populated the area. Von Hauenschild, in fact,
criticized the point of view of the academic elite in Buenos Aires. (See, for example,
PAH document l l 5 and Relaciones 1 940.)
The scholars in Buenos Aires opposed the view of the Wagner brothers and
their ideas about the civilization of Chaco-Santiago. The conference program, in
fact, seems to disclose an indication that pre-selection occurred in order to mar
ginalize the Wagners' point of view (Martinez et al 2003: 242). The Wagners were
also criticized by the archaeologists in Buenos Aires due to the lack of photos, maps,
plans, field diaries, and scientific relevance of their fieldwork.
I ntellectual Elite in Santiago del Estero
The Wagner brothers did send collections to France from Santiago del Estero, espe
cially to the Musee d'Ethnographie du Trocadero, which was the first ethnographi
cal museum in Paris, founded in 1 878. It was here that Georges-Henri Riviere, with
the help of Alfred Metraux, George Bataille, and Paul Rivet, organized the first pop
ular pre-Columbian exhibition in France in 1 920. The Wagners sent ceramics from
the Chaco-Santiago civilization, helping the Trocadero museum to strengthen and
construct the European social image of " The Other:' At the Trocadero, most of the
objects were displayed as art objects. They were displayed as exotic examples of art
from the New World for their aesthetic values and not for the cultural "native" con
text (Ocampo 2005: 1 04) .
In 1 924 Emilio began working at the museum in Santiago, and was appointed
director in 1 927; his brother was appointed vice director and thereby they strength
ened the links with the Trocadero museum in Paris and other European museums
collecting ethnographical/archaeological objects from South America. The Wagners
& H E N RI K B. LI N DSKOUG
Figure 2 .
133
A sh owcase with objects from the van Hauensch i l d collection exhibited at the
I n d ustrial fai r i n Buenos Ai res. Fi rst pu blished by La Prensa (1 2 April 1934). I m age courtesy of
the van H auensch i ld collection at the Museo de Antropologfa, FFyH , U N C .
collected a huge number of items for the institution. In 1 934 the museum in San
tiago held 1 7,000 objects; later, the collection grew to 65,000 (Ocampo 2005: 1 06).
With the help and guidance of the Wagner brothers, however, von Hauenschild
became interested in the prehistoric inhabitants of the province of Santiago del Estero.
The correspondence between von Hauenschild and the Wagners reveals the extent to
which rifts were forged among those with interests to in Santiago's archeology. Von
Hauenschild had developed a friendly relationship with Duncan moreso than with
Emilio. In a letter from 1 934 (PAH document 65) written in a friendly tone, Duncan
Wagner asks von Hauenschild to show him some tombs. Another letter from 1 936
to the Museum of the American Indian indicates that von Hauenschild still had inti
mate contact with the Wagners, asking the museum to contact the Wagners in order
to acquire artefacts from Santiago for their collection (PAH document 92). A change
in relation is noted in a letter from von Hauenschild to Antonio Serrano. In response
to a query by Serrano to come and visit the museum in Santiago, von Hauenschild in
dicated that he had developed a friendship with the late Duncan Wagner, but had no
relationship with Emilio (PAH document 1 29).
1 34
Figure 3.
F ROM AMAT E U R C O L L ECTOR TO PRO FE S S I O N A L ARCHAEO LOG I ST
&
Jorge von Hauenschild in his private museum in his h ouse in La Banda, Santiago del
Estero, 1937. Fi rst published by Mundo Argentina (24 of N ove m be r, 1937). I mage courtesy of
the von Hauensch i l d collection at the Museo de Antropologfa, FFyH , U N C .
An Interest i n Archaeology Awakens
Around 1 925, von Hauenschild became interested in the prehistory of Santiago del
Estero, at about the time that the Wagner brothers started their investigations in
Santiago. Having settled in Santiago del Estero in 1 904, they began studying the
material culture. The ceramics unearthed in Santiago del Estero were "documents"
of an ancient unknown civilization which they called the "Chaco-Santiaguefi.a Civi
lisation" (Martinez et al. 2003, 2008). The Wagners made their way into the elite
of the Santiago province. Their reputations grew in popularity, both in intellectual
circles and among the common folk, because of their discoveries. Meanwhile von
Hauenschild started to perform his own excavation along the left margin of the Rio
Dulce. He began first in the company of the Wagners and then he undertook inde
pendent investigations in 1 928 (Lindskoug 2008a; 2008b ). During these interwar
years, it is easy to imagine how strained relations might be between the Wagner
brothers (of French heritage) and the German-born von Hauenschild. The opinion
of von Hauenschild regarding Duncan and Emilio is obvious through the PAH,
while the opinion of the Wagners is evident in several of their preserved writings
(Martinez et al 2003).
The First Explorations
Von Hauenschild's first explorations were done in Quiroga6 about 14 km north of
La Banda, continuing north to Chaupi Pozo. South of Quiroga, von Hauenschild
135
& H E N RI K B. LI N DS KO U G
f1
�'
Santiago del Estero
'•
La Banda
"•
£$ter?'
Santiago del
Cap�<tl
Vllmar
,• • H•ltrAn
',
e Famandor
found a n extensive archaeological site
extending close to the irrigation sys
tem La Cuarteada. Here, he discovered
traces of two important "pueblos:' The
largest was in Quiroga and the other
in front of Chaupi Pozo and a smaller
settlement in between these two sites
( PAH document 78, 79) .
Th e first archaeological surveys
were done in a zone around 200 km
from the "settlements of Chaco" along
side the left margin of the Rio Dulce.
An area of around 50 km was explored
from SE to NW Several indications
Qkm �m ..,f1,,Dkm
Figure 5 .
( below) Jorge van Haue nschi ld
(right) in the field at the Rio Du lce . Photo
Figure 4.
(above) Map of the province of
from the van H auenschild collectio n . I m age
Santiago del Estero with some of the sites
cou rtesy of the van Hauenschild collection
m entioned i n the text. Map by author.
at the Museo de Antropologfa, F Fy H , U N C .
1 36
F ROM AMAT E U R COLL ECTOR TO PROFES S I O N A L ARCHAEO LOG I ST
&
were found that the area had been occupied earlier. The topography of the settle
ments revealed the location of former rivers. Von Hauenschild stated in an inter
view that ". . . the very large settlement, up to 1 00 hectares, with perfect organization
and well marked streets oriented according to the four cardinal points" was found
and investigated ( PAH document 82).
After this, von Hauenschild managed to locate several archaeological sites.
He worked extensively at Acosta, Quiroga, Chaupi Pozo, Bocatoma, La Cuarteada,
Vilmer, Soria, and Bajadita. Most objects in the collection originated from these
sites.
From Amateu r to Professionalism
Von Hauenschild's early fieldwork can be viewed as the activity of an amateur pri
vate collector in search of the treasures of ancient civilizations. Over time, von Hau
enschild continued with extensive fieldwork. Subsequently, his way of working in
the field changed, as noted in his correspondence with the archaeological society of
Argentina and international professionals.
First, he created his own museum in his house in La Banda. By 1 934, this
museum, the Museo Arqueol6gico y Paleontol6gico del Ing. Hauenschild, housed a
collection of over 2000 objects, mostly ceramics and lithics (Lindskoug 2008a). By
1 948, the holdings had increased to over 4000 objects. In addition to growth, better
documentation indicated a move toward increased professionalism. Von Hauens
child also had an interest in the diffusion and extension of his collection; he said in
a newspaper interview that most visitors to the museum were school children and
visiting tourists (Lindskoug 2008a).
Von Hauenschild's attention to professionalism can be read in his private cor
respondence. In a 1 934 letter, Alfredo Castellano urged von Hauenschild to take
photos of the finds, map the site, make drawings of the sections and the stratigraphy,
and take samples from every layer during the excavation of the archaeological sites.
Seven years later, von Hauenschild argued in a newspaper article that to perform
excavations, all modern scientific methods must be used, such as comparative ar
chaeology, palaeontology, geology, and ethnography (El Indio, 1 5 February 1 94 1 ,
PAH document 1 1 8). In the same article, h e openly criticized the Wagner brothers
for how they worked in the field, indicating that their poor methods resulted in sig
nificant loss of scientific information. The Wagners had excavated several hundred
tombs but there were no records about the excavations. In fact, the Wagner museum
does not even possess a complete catalogue of the objects found.
Von Hauenschild continued in his critique, indicating that his own profes
sionalism can be glimpsed through descriptions he made of archaeological sites in
the field. These were recorded in his publications of 1 94 1 (El Indio no. 7, 15 April
& H E N R I K B. LI N DS KO U G
Figure 6 .
137
Surrounded b y archaeological objects from h i s excavations, Jorge von Hauenschild
i n his study read i n g La Civilazi6n Chaco-Santiaguena by the Wagner brothers. Fi rst publ ished
by Mundo Argentina (24 of N ovem ber, 1 937). I mage courtesy of the von H auenschild col lec
tion at the Museo de Antropologfa, FFyH , U N C .
1 94 1 , PAH document 1 22). Von Hauenschild had obtained a great knowledge of ge
ology and of the importance of the stratigraphic layers for the interpretation of the
objects. A geological cross section was also made in proximity to the archaeological
remains. Von Hauenschild described poor conservation of human remains, noting
that most often the only thing remaining at archaeological sites is a greyish powder.
His last publications reflected high standards for the time (von Hauenschild 1 949b,
1 95 1 ).
Von Hauenschild sent several objects for analysis to different specialists
throughout Argentina. He used the latest archaeological methods to extract infor
mation from the objects found in the excavations. He let Jose Imbelloni analyze the
collection of craniums ( Hauenschild 1 949b: 49) . He sent other human remains to
be analyzed by Carlos Rusconi in Buenos Aires around 1 933 or 1 934 (PAH docu
ment 68) and also an animal-bone flute, which was classified as gunaco (Hauens
child 1 943b: 1 32 ) . In 1 946, von Hauenschild contacted Amparo Tartaglia in Cor
doba to perform analyses of ceramic material to determine the provenance of the
138
F ROM AMAT E U R COLL ECTOR T O PROFES S I O N A L ARCHAEO LOG I ST
&
clay source ( PAH document 1 8 1 , 1 82, 1 85, 1 86, 1 87). He also sent material to the
Direcci6n de Minas Geologia y sus Industrias, Cordoba, Laboratorio Quimico to ob
tain information about the chemical composition of the ceramics in the collection
(PAH document 294). Von Hauenschild sent beads or part of a necklace to Martin
Doello Jurado to determine its provenance (von Hauenschild 1 943b: 1 32).
Such analyses, requested by von Hauenschild and performed by others, indi
cate that von Hauenschild was moving toward a greater professionalism. This path
clearly distinguishes him from his contemporaries. To have others analyze the min
eral content in ceramics was an uncommon practice by the archaeological commu
nity in Argentina, including the Wagner brothers.
Dea lings with the Argentinean Archaeolog ica l Com m u nity
The year 1 942 marks a turning point in von Hauenschild's life. During this year von
Hauenschild wrote to several university departments of anthropology, archaeology,
and ethnology, indicating his desire to find a new home for his collection and a new
job for himself (PAH document 123, 1 24, 12 5). His reasons for actually selling the col
lection were not stated. He turned to Instituto Miguel Lillo at Universidad Nacional de
Tucuman (UNT), the most prestigious university in northwestern Argentina at that
time. In turn, they directed him to the UNT's Instituto de Antropologia.7 UNT's In
stituto de Antropologia began discussions to buy the collection; however a change of
rector (and his administration) at the university halted the process.
For several years, von Hauenschild tried to get employment at UNT. The po
litical situation in Argentina was very unstable, leading to a turbulent climate in
the academic world. Finally in August 1 946, von Hauenschild hired as Organizador
de la Secci6n Arqueologia, Aux. del Segundo grado at the Instituto de Antropologia,
Facultad de Filosofia y Letras8 with a salary of 300 pesos per month ( PAH document
1 95, 1 96, 1 97, 1 98, 1 99). Here, he worked alongside Antonio Serrano, the director
of the Instituto de Arqueologia, Lingiiistica y Folklore "Dr. Pablo Cabrera," UNC. In
December of that same year, von Hauenschild quit his job at UNT ( PAH document
203, 204). According to an undated document in the archive, von Hauenschild quit
for several reasons: first, he had finished organizing a large part of the collection;9
second, there was a lack of space for his work; and third, there was not enough time
to complete the work at hand ( PAH document 27 1 ) .
In 1 947, von Hauenschild was in close contact with Serrano in Cordoba about
employment at the Institute there. This time the hire was approved but it couldn't
be implemented until sufficient money could be gathered. When von Hauenschild
got the job in Cordoba, it took several months until he actually moved. Serrano
wrote him several times and asked him to come to Cordoba to take charge of his
& H E N RI K B. LI N DSKOUG
139
Figure 7 . A stereotypical i m age o f a n archaeologist at that ti m e showing Jorge von Hauen
sch i l d smoking a pipe i n his private m useum i n La Banda. First publ ished by Mundo Argentina
(24 of N ovem ber, 1 937). I m age courtesy of the von Hauenschild collection at the Museo d e
Antropologfa, FFy H , U N C .
post. During this time, von Hauenschild remained in contact with UNT about a
possilbe position at that university. In December 1 947, Osvaldo Luis Paulotti, inter
im director at the Instituto de Antropologfa UNT, urged von Hauenschild to accept
the position in Cordoba, indicating that he would try to create a post in Tucuman
(PAH document 234). Paulotti also indicated that, while the budget hadn't been ap
proved, there was activity toward hiring professors from abroad despite the climate
at universities during a turbulent and unstable political environment in Argentina.
In March 1 948, Paulotti wrote von Hauenschild again about a post as associate pro
fessor of Prehistory and Archaeology with a salary of 800 pesos per month (PAH
document 243). However, von Hauenschild, never left Cordoba, where he contin
ued to work until his death in 1 95 1 .
1 40
F ROM AMAT E U R COL LECTO R TO PRO FE S S I O NAL ARCHAEOLO G I ST
&
Von Hauenschild and the l n stituto de Arqueologia, Lingi.iistica y Folklore
"Dr. Pa blo Ca brera" in Cordoba
The first contact with the Instituto de Arqueolog{a, Lingii{stica y Folklore "Dr. Pablo
Cabrera," UNC was a postcard indicating that Antonio Serrano had received two
publications von Hauenschild had sent him ( 1 943a, 1 943b) ( PAH document 1 26).
Soon after, Serrano wrote to von Hauenschild and offered to publish an article, in
the Institute's series "Publicaciones" about the archaeological heritage in Santiago
del Estero. Serrano gave him free rein with the extension of the article and also of
fered that the Institute in Cordoba would pay for photos or drawings of the material
(PAH document 1 28). Serrano was also interested in obtaining some objects for
the museum collection. Serrano's goal was to obtain specimens from all over the
country for his Institute, but especially from the center of the country. Von Hauen
schild indicated that this request could be arranged if Serrano would undertake a
journey to Santiago del Estero, where he might easily obtain archaeological objects
(PAH document 1 29). Serrano not only asked if he could obtain material for the
!collections but also asked von Hauenschild to talk to Emilio Wagner, Director of
the Museum in Santiago, so that Serrano might examine their collections when he
comes to Santiago del Estero. He told von Hauenschild in a letter that he intended
to create the best research center in central Argentina in Cordoba. (This exchange
demonstrated the nature of collecting in the 1 940s when archaeological heritage
was seen as a commodity that could be bought and sold.)
In 1 944, Serrano contacted the Rector of the UNC to create a position for
von Hauenschild and to buy his collection (PAH document 1 43, 1 44, 145). Serrano
pushed for these actions until 1 947 when his proposal to purchase von Hauens
child's collection was approved, and Serrano also pressed for von Hauenschild to be
hired as Assistant Investigator of the Instituto de Arqueolog{a, Lingiiistica y Folklore
(PAH document 227; Ferreyra 2006: 1 26). The securing of the position was straight
forward: Von Hauenschild was paid a monthly salary of 350 pesos. Subsequently,
Serrano urged von Hauenschild to come to Cordoba and take charge of his post,
which he did in January or February 1 948. As to the collection, however, Serrano
had asked the university for 1 0,000 pesos to purchase the von Hauenschild; but the
funding proved problematic. After a long struggle with the university system, the
payment was completed in 1 948.
Von Hauenschild in the I nternational Arena
Von Hauenschild developed many contacts with anthropologists and archaeologists
all over the world, as far away as Colombia, the United States, Sweden, Germany,
and Switzerland. He also had an extensive network of other investigators in the
& H E N RI K B. L I N DSKOUG
141
same field throughout Argentina and i n Chile. Among the most noted are Salva
dor Canals Frau ( 1 893- 1 958), Antonio Serrano ( 1 899- 1 982), Jose Imbelloni ( 1 8851 967), Alberto Rex Gonzalez ( 1 9 1 8-20 1 2) in Argentina; Grete Mostny ( 1 9 1 4- 1 99 1 )
i n Chile; Gerhard Lindblom ( 1 887- 1 969), Sigvald Linne ( 1 899- 1 986), Stig Ryden
( 1 908- 1 965), and Magnus Morner ( 1 924-20 1 2) in Sweden; and Karin Hissink
( 1 907- 1 98 1 ) and Hermann Trimborn ( 1 90 1 - 1 986) in Germany.
He was in contact with investigators working in Colombia and was very in
terested in an archaeological find by Dr. Victor Oppenheim in the valley of the river
Rancheria, as evidenced by the presence of the newspaper clipping and a companion
letter he wrote (La Prensa, 1 March 1 94 1 , PAH document 1 1 9, and PAH document
1 20). Like many people working in this field during these years, von Hauenschild
was particularly interested in diffusion and migration of concepts and technologies.
Most anthropologists, archaeologists, and ethnographers thought that cultures and
cultural inventions were spread through migration and diffusion when different
cultural groups met called the "kulturkreiste" school.
Von Hauenschild had also been in contact with museums in the United
States. In 1 936, The Museum of the American Indian wrote to von Hauenschild
after that they had seen his article in La Prensa (7 April 1 935). They were inter
ested in knowing if von Hauenschild had published any more articles of the ce
ramics from Chaco-Santiago. They were also highly interested in acquiring ce
ramic objects for their museum. They asked if von Hauenschild was interested
in exchanging of some of his duplicate pieces with material from the Museum's
duplicate collections ( PAH document 9 1 ) . In the same letter, the museum asked if
he was interested in the exchange, and if so, invited him to inform them of speci
mens and areas from which he would like to acquire obj ects.10 This was common
practice during the first part of the 20th century in museums: museum directors
exchanged duplicates or otherwise less desirable museum pieces with other mu
seums. Fortunately, this custom is no longer practiced by museums, per ICOM's
code of ethics (2006).
International Contacts with the Museum World in Sweden and Denmark
Swedish investigators established an early interest in the South American conti
nent, especially Argentina. In particular, museum professionals in the Scandinavian
countries viewed these areas, including those where von Hauenschild worked, as
uncharted territory. The discoveries of the Wagner brothers had reached many mu
seums in Europe - through donations - which functioned as publicity to lure the
museums to purchase artefacts from them. Erland Nordenskiold, Director of the
Ethnographic Department of Goteborg Museum,1 1 did pioneering work concern
ing northwestern Argentina, the Chaco region in Paraguay, and Bolivia (Lindberg
1 42
F ROM AMAT E U R COLLECTOR TO PRO FE S S I O NAL ARCHAEOLO G I ST
&
1 996). Nordenskiald's disciples from Sweden and the Ethnographic Museum con
tinued to work in these areas and build extensive reference collections from all over
the South American continent. Stig Ryden, a disciple of Nordenskiald, who later be
came Curator of the Museum after Nordenskiald's death, worked extensively both
in Candelaria12 and Tiawanaku, Boliva. Von Hauenschild supplied Ryden and the
Ethnographic Museum with ceramic samples in 1 94 7.
On May 22, 1 947, W A. Ruysch van Gorkum, Chair at ETHNOS - Archivo
de Etnologia, Antropologia y Arqueologia, wrote to von Hauenschild ( PAH docu
ment 208). Van Gorkum told von Hauenschild that he would visit Santiago del
Estero, on the 8th or 9th of June, along with Magnus Marner. 13 Van Gorkum also
contacted Oreste di Lullo ( 1 898- 1 983) - an intellectual based in Santiago and con
cerned with medicine, policy, and history - offering Marner to give a lecture about
relations between Sweden and the South American states during the 1 9th century.
Van Gorkum also asked von Hauenschild to send some ceramic samples to the Eth
nographical Museum in Gothenburg. Stig Ryden, curator at the museum, had asked
for samples from Chaco-Santiago and van Gorkum didn't have any samples to send.
This matter was arranged and Marner brought the samples to Sweden (PAH docu
ment 2 1 8).
Van Gorkum later sent material to the Ethnographic Museum in Gothenburg
as Ryden had asked. This collection arrived in 1 948, consisted of 42 archaeological
objects from Argentina, only one from Santiago del Estero and single items from
Catamarca, La Rioja, Tucuman and Salta. As a collection, they bear the number
1 948 . 1 . The object from Santiago del Estero came from Estacion Fernandez, a place
where von Hauenschild had collected objects. While it's uncertain as to whether or
not this very object was collected by von Hauenschild, the possibility exists. As to
the possibility of ceramic samples from von Hauenschild, further research might
clarify the provanance.14 In exchange for the collection, an arrangement was made
for publication of Etnologiska Studier 15 (Fasth 2003:35).
Von Hauenschild had close contact with his Swedish colleagues until his
death. They wrote often and exchanged publications. Von Hauenschild was also in
contact with Sigvald Linne and Gerhard Lindblom at the Ethnographical Museum
in Stockholm. Stig Ryden was later employed at the Ethnographical Museum in
Stockholm and there he received more artefacts from von Hauenschild. The col
lections donated include 1 949. 1 0, consisting of 38 objects from Santiago and some
publications by von Hauenschild. Collection 1 956. 1 , contains 3 1 objects, includ
ing casts of archaeological objects from the Museo Arqueol6gico in Santiago del
Estero.
The Archives of the National Museum of Copenhagen in Denmark contain
correspondence from the 1 930s between Director Thomson and the engineer Thor
Oluf Andersen. Such correspondence indicates the shared interests between the
men. Andersen lived in Buenos Aires, and was a friend of both von Hauenschild
& H E N R I K B. LI N DSKOUG
1 43
and the Wagners. Along with Andersen, this group was planning an archaeological
expedition to Santiago on behalf of the National Museum. The expedition was never
carried out, however, in the correspondence Andersen tells Thomson that von Hau
enschild always kept a piece of ceramic potsherd in his pocket. 16
The Arrival of the von Ha uenschild Collection i n Cordoba
It was a problematic task to transport the collection from von Hauenschild's pri
vate museum in his home in La Banda, to Cordoba. Most of the objects were ce
ramic and very fragile. The breadth of the collection - 200 funeral urns, for ex
ample - made the transport a risky event, due both to the length of the journey
(over 500 km) and the road conditions at the time. To minimize the cost of trans
portation Serrano wrote to von Hauenschild (PAH document 23 7) saying that he
thought that the collection should be transported in trucks with a lot of straw in or
der to avoid packing material. Since the collection had over 4000 objects, the trans
portation was divided into four separate occasions, according to documents found
in the archive. 17 The transportation was arranged by Andres Carlos Seeven. The cost
of each single transport was 500 pesos; altogether the cost of transportation was
2000 pesos. It was a high cost compared to the monthly salary of von Hauenschild
(300 pesos). The transportation was done on the following dates: 28 May, 4 June, 25
June, and 2 July. During the same time as the collection was being transported to
Cordoba, von Hauenschild went out on a survey.18
According to the discovered documents, the trucks were filled with straw
to protect the objects. There are no photos or documents concerning the contents
themselves, thus it is impossible to know if the objects arrived safely or if some were
broken during transport.
The circle was now closed. Von Hauenschild had managed to get a job at a uni
versity and his collection was now part of the Institute. He had gone from a mere am
ateur to a professional archaeologist working at a well-known university. Von Hauen
schild died on 2 November 1 95 1 after a long illness. He was buried 3 November 1 95 1
in the cemetery of Carlos Paz where h e had lived since 1 909 with wife, Paula (PAH
document 320). His tomb is simple, unnoticeable, and neglected for years, much like
the tombs he had once excavated. 19
The Collection Keeps Growi n g
A second part of the von Hauenschild collection was donated to the Institute on 23
May 1 976 through Emma Weigelt, Paula's sister's daughter (niece of von Hauens
child). This donation was made four years after the death of von Hauenschild's wife
1 44
Figure 8.
FROM AMAT E U R COLLECTO R TO PROFESSIONAL ARCHAEOLOG I ST
F u neral u rns from the von H auensch i l d collectio n , located in Reserva B, Reserva
Patrim onial del M useo de Antropologia, Facultad de Fi losofia y H u manidades , U n iversidad
N acional de Cordoba. Photo cou rtesy of the author.
&
& H E N RI K B. L I N DSKOUG
1 45
( PAH document 38 1 ), and consisted mostly of books, archaeological, and ethno
logical material. Three lists were found with documents of the registered material,
one with the archaeological/ethnological material which consists of 69 items. Far
more than 69 items were donated, however, as some objects have the same inven
tory numbers. In fact, the donation total is closer to 200 items. The collection was in
a state of neglect and disorder. Innumerable objects had been decontextualized and
exhibited as art, and their heritage had deteriorated.
The I nstitution, the Collection a n d the Collector:
How the Collection was Col lected
The von Hauenschild collection was formed at a time when collecting frenzy was
apparent in many parts of the world. European institutions and museums collected
to strengthen their dominant position in the world; moreover, a colonial paradigm
informs the way in which the collections were gathered and displayed. Political,
economic, and social prestige is tightly bound to the collections in many European
museums; the Museo de Antropologfa, UNC is no exception. Founded on the same
premises and modelled after the European institutions, the museum's first director,
Antonio Serrano, wanted to create a center for the study of the prehistory of the
Argentinean nation. This feat was accomplished and, through the incorporation of
the von Hauenschild collection, the Institute and Museum managed to appropriate
an important part of the Argentinean prehistory ignored by the intellectual elite in
Buenos Aires.
The von Hauenschild collection consists primarily of ceramics, which is re
lated to the fact that ceramic is one of the materials often best preserved in the ar
chaeological register, along with lithic objects. However, the preference at the time
was to collect ceramic "masterpieces" which could offer a collector some sense of
social prestige. Such social standing must have been important for von Hauens
child, of German descent, in order to be able to position himself in the Argentinean
society, even while pro-European attitudes were present in the Argentinean society
and immigrants were welcome there. Yet, due to the international conflicts, atti
tudes differed: in fact, when Antonio Serrano wrote to the Rector of the university,
asking for the establishment of von Hauenschild's position, Serrano noted that the
archeologist was of German descent but ws also a man of democratic values ( PAH
document 143, 1 44, 1 45, 227) . At this time, the discipline of anthropology, most
strongly connected to European colonialism, developed as a need to understand,
interpret, and dominate "the other" - in this case, the "other" from the Americas.
This era in Argentina was characterized by the establishment of archaeology
and anthropology in universities; archaeology is closely related to anthropology. In
many cases the Argentinean state invited European scholars to the universities in
1 46
FROM AMAT E U R COLLECTOR TO PRO F ESSIO NAL ARCHAEOLOG I ST
&
Argentina with a desire to Europeanize the country according to the standard of the
Argentinean elite. The European immigration was immense in the first part of the
twentieth century and was encouraged by the Argentinean government. It was im
portant to a "new" nation and especially after the negation of indigenous rights and
extermination of the indigenous people in the conquest of the desert. Influential an
thropologists and archaeologists took part and started to collect for the Argentinean
university museums (Stagnaro 1 993).
Von Hauenschild, a resident in Santiago del Estero for almost 30 years, aimed
to strengthen the image of the prehistory of Santiago and to demonstrate reasons
for provincial pride in spite of depopulation, deforestation, profiteering, and neglect
of one of the culturally rich provinces in Argentina. Early railway projects left many
ghost-towns, and the canal projects changed the course of Rio Dulce, in which von
Hauenschild had taken an active part as an engineer.
Von Hauenschild's collection can be seen as a scientific collection. As a col
lector, he was selective and interested in ceramics, as evidenced by his publications
and the materials he sent for analysis. He made efforts to keep up with the latest
archaeological interpretations and methods to create a new, vivid image of the pre
history of Santiago del Estero. The collection can be compared with many other
private collections from the same era that were collected under other paradigms.
Von Hauenschild's aim was to form a scientific collection to answer questions about
the prehistory of Santiago del Estero. And while he may have started his path of
collecting as a simple grave robber, he ended it as a professional using the modern
archaeological methods for that time.
Acknowledg ments
I especially want direct my thanks to Dario Quiroga, conservator at the Museo de
Antropologia; Mirta Bonnin, our former director at the the Museo de Antropologia;
and Adriana Munoz, Latin American curator at the Museum of World Culture in
Sweden. All of them have assisted me during the investigation of the von Hauen
schild collection. However any mistakes in this paper are my own responsibility.
Notes
1. The Industrial school of Santiago de! Estero is sometimes called Escuela Industrial de la Nacion
in Santiago del Estero.
2. Part of his collection was donated to the Museo de Antropologia, UNC.
3. Victor Nunez Reguiero ( 1 934-2009) never published any of the results of his investigations in
Santiago de! Estero, but the Museo de Antropologia, UNC, where he worked when he excavated
& H E N RI K 8. LI N DSKOUG
1 47
in Santiago del Estero in the 1 960s, has a collection with objects from his excavations. See Togo
2008 for investigations about archaeological research and the colonial past in Santiago del Es
tero.
4. The museum was created in 1 9 1 7 as Museo Arcaico de Santiago del Estero and has been
renamed several times. In 1 930 the name was changed to Museo Arqueol6gico Provincial, fol
lowed, in 1 952 by the Museo Arqueol6gico Emilio y Duncan Wagner. Since 1 992, it has been
called Museo de Ciencias Antropol6gicas y Naturales "Emilio y Duncan Wagner:'
5. See Relaciones de la Sociedad Argentina de Antropologia, N°2, 1 940, Buenos Aires, where many
of the papers from the conference in 1 939 were published.
6. "Paraje" in Spanish.
7. Refers to the Institute of Anthropology which was founded by Alfred Metraux as Instituto de
Etnologia in 1 928 and was one of the most prestigious Anthropology departments in Argentina
at the time, along with the similar museums or departments at Universidad de Buenos Aires and
Universidad Nacional de La Plata both in the province of Buenos Aires. A native of Switzerland,
Alfred Metraux studied at Gi::iteborgs hOgskola (later Gi::iteborg University) under Erland Nord
enskii::il d. For Metraux's importance see Munoz 2003.
8. His title translates as "Organizer of the archaeological section at the Institute of Anthropology,
Faculty of Philosophy and Letters:'
9. According to the undated documents, the only things not organized were the small ceramic
fragments. This approach is akin to the spirit of the time: archeologists considered fragments of
no use. This is not the position of modern day archaeologists who know the importance of such
items.
10. If an exchange ever took place, nothing about it can be found anywhere in von Hauenschild's
archive (see PAH documents 9 1 , 92 and 93). Perhaps an exchange took place between the Wag
ner museum and the Museum of the American Indian, since most probably the museum in the
USA contacted this museum. This, however, is the author's own speculation.
1 1 . The Ethnographical department at the Gi::iteborgs museum later became an independent mu
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
seum in 1 946 called the Gi::iteborg Ethnographic Museum, which closed in 2000, for construc
tion of its new museum, the Museum of World Culture, which opened to the public in 2004.
Candelaria is situated in the Salta province in Northwest Argentina.
Magnus Mi::ir ner was another Swedish scholar interested in Latin American historical develop
ment. He had studied Argentina and the Jesuit expulsion from the Missiones area and wrote his
dissertation about this historical development (Mi::ir ner 1 953).
According to Jan Amnehall, Head of Collections at Museum of World Culture, there has been
no reference to Jorge von Hauenschild found in the collection (April 2008).
Etnologiska Studier (in English, Ethnological Studies) was a publication from the Ethnographical
Museum in Gi::iteborg (Gothenburg).
Personal communication from archaeologist Svend A. Buus (December 20 1 0 ) . Letters sent
between Andersen and Thomson, 18 September 1 936; 2 1 December 1 936; 16 January 1 937; 25
January 1 937, Archive of National Museum of Copenhagen, Denmark.
1 7 . Found in Plan de Gastos 1 948. (Budget 1 948). The Archive of Museo de Antropologia, UNC.
1 8 . He left on 10 May from Cordoba. The cost of this survey was 300 pesos. See Plan de Gastos
1 948. Vale n°5. The Archive of Museo de Antropologia, UNC.
19. A visit to the cemetery in August 2008 in Villa Carlos Paz showed that the grave had been aban
doned for years; no one had paid for the maintenance for several years according to the admin
istration of the cemetery, which had problems locating the grave. Secci6n 1, Tabion 7, Posa 3 1 .
148
FROM AMAT E U R COLLECTOR TO PRO FESSIONAL ARCHAEO LOG IST
&
Referen ces
Fasth, Natalia. 2003. La Candelaria- Preservation and Conservation of an Archaeological museum
Collection from North- Western Argentina at the Museum of World Culture, Sweden. Goteborg
University, Department of Environmental Science and Conservation, Institute of Conservation.
Unpublished MA thesis.
Ferreyra, Carlos Alfredo. Museo, Ciencia y Sociedad en la Cordoba moderna. El Museo Historico Pro
vincial y el Museo de Antropologia: pensamento y practica. Publicaciones, Universidad Nacional
de Cordoba.
Gomez, Roque Manuel. 1 970. Alfarerias intrusivas en las culturas indigenas de Santiago del Estero.
Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Instituto de Antropologia. Publication XXXI.
Gomez, Roque Manuel. 2009. Arqueologia santiaguefia. Un disefio de investigacion para el Formativo
Inferior: fase explorativa. In Revista del Museo de Antropologia 2:53-66.
von Hauenschild, Jorge. 1 943a. Revista de la Junta de Estudios Historicos de Santiago del Estero Ano
I, N° 1. Santiago del Estero.
von Hauenschild, Jorge. 1 943b. Los Aborigenes de Santiago del Estero. In Revista de la Junta de Estu
dios Hist6ricos de Santiago del Estero, Ano I, N° 2.: 1 1 6- 1 3 7, Santiago del Estero.
von Hauenschild, Jorge. 1 949b. Ensayo de clasificaci6n de la documentation arqueol6gica de Santiago
del Estero. Universidad Nacional de Cordoba.
von Hauenschild, Jorge. 1 95 1 . Injluencias Paranaenses y Pampeanas. Universidad Nacional de Cor
doba.
International Council of Museums ( ICOM) 2006. ICOM Code ofEthics for Museums.
Lindberg, Christer. 1 996. Erland NordenskiOld-ett indianlif. Kungliga Vitterhets Akademins Serie:
Svenska Larde. Bokforlaget Natur & Kultur, Stockholm.
Lindskoug, Henrik, B. 2008a. Mysteries from the inside of the earth, heritage hidden away in the
depths of a deposit-A study in collection management of the von Hauenschild collection at
the Museo de Antropologia, UNC, Argentina. IMS-programme, Museion, Goteborg University,
Sweden. Unpublished Master's Thesis.
Lindskoug, Henrik B. 2008b. En la sombra de la arqueologia argentina: Jorge von Hauenschild y la
formacion de la coleccion von Hauenschild del Museo de Antropologia (Universidad Nacional
de Cordoba). I n Revista del Museo de Antropologia, 1 ( 1 ):6 1 -70.
Lindskoug, Henrik B. 2009. Redescubriendo el patrimonio Santagueno en el subsuelo de la unviveri
dad. La coleccion von Hauemschild en el Museo de Antropologia, FFYH, UNC. Paper presented
at VI Jornadas de Encuentro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Sociales y Humanas. Facultad de
Filosofia y Humanidades Centro de Investigaciones "Maria Saleme de Burnichon" Universidad
Nacional de Cordoba, Argentina: Cordoba. 2009. Accessible online: http://publicaciones.ffyh.
unc.edu.arI index. php/6encuentro/article/viewFile/ 1 85/23 7
Martinez, Ana Teresa, Constanza Taboada and Luis Alejandro Auat. 2003. Los Hermanos Wagner:
entre ciencia, mito y poesia. Arqueologia, campo arqueol6gico macional y construcci6n de iden
tidad en Santiago del Estero 1 920-1 940. Ediciones Universidad Catolica de Santiago del Estero.
Santiago del Estero.
Martinez, Ana Teresa, Constanza Taboada and Luis Alejandro Auat. 2008. The Wagner Brothers.
French Archaeologists and the Original Myths in Early Twentieth-Century Argentina. In Ar
chives, Ancestors, Practices. Archaeology in Light of its History, edited by Nathan Schlanger and
Jarl Nordbladh, pp. 26 1 -27 1 . Berghahn Books: New York and Oxford.
Munoz, Adriana. 2003. La Formacion de las colecciones arqueologicas sudamericanas en Goteborg.
El periodo de Erland Nordenskiold. In Anales del Museo de America: 237-252.
eJ
H E N RI K B. L I N DSKOUG
1 49
Morner, Magnus. 1 953. The political and economic activities of the Jesuits in the La Plata region. The
Hapsburg Era. Library and Institute of Ibero-American Studies, Stockholm.
Ocampo, Beatriz. 2005. La Nacion Interior-Canal Feijoo, Di Lullo y las Hermanos Wagner-El
Discurso culturalista de estos intelectuales en la provincia de Santiago del Estero. Antropofagia:
Buenos Aires.
Relaciones de la Sociedad Argentina de Antropologia. 1 940. Vol. II, Buenos Aires.
Stagnaro, Adriana Alejandra. 1 993. La antropologia en la comunidad cientifica: entre el origen del
hombre y la caza de craneos-trofeo ( 1 870- 1 9 1 0) . Alteridades 3(6): 53-65.
Taboada, Constanza. 20 1 1 . Repensando la arqueologia de Santiago del Estero. Construcci6n y analisis
de una problematica. Relaciones de la Sociedad Argentina de Antropologia 36: 1 97-2 19.
Togo, Jose. 2008. Recopilaci6n bibliografica sobre aportes al conocimiento prehispanico y colonial de
Santiago del Estero. Indoamerica I I (2): 9-54.
Wagner, Emilio and Duncan, Ladislao Wagner. 1 934. La Civilazion Chaco-Santiaguefza y sus correla
ciones con las del Viejo y Nuevo Mundo. Torno I, Buenos Aires.
Newspa per so u rces
Critica (Buenos Aires)
La Gaceta (San Miguel de Tucuman)
El Indio (Buenos Aires)
El Liberal (Santiago del Estero)
Mundo (Santiago del Estero)
La Nacion (Buenos Aires)
El Orden (Puerto Deseado)
La Prensa (Buenos Aires)
La Razon (Buenos Aires)
Arc h iva l s o u rces
The Archive of the Museum of World Culture, Goteborg, Sweden.
Charlotta, the database for museum collections at the Ethnographical Museum in Stockholm, http://
collections.smvk.se/pls/em/rigby. Accessed online 18 November 20 1 0.
Kringla, a search system for several Swedish museums and archives developed by the Swedish Na
tional Heritage Board. http://www.kringla.nu/kringla/ accessed 08 March 20 1 2 .
T h e Personal Archive ofJorge van Hauenschild (referred t o as PAH) deposited in t h e archive of the
Museo de Antroplogia, Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades, Universidad Nacional de Cor
doba, Argentina.